AKT is a potent antiapoptotic kinase, but its role in the cardioprotective actions of α1-adrenergic receptors (ARs) remains uncertain, because α1-ARs typically induce little-to-no AKT activation in most cardiomyocyte models. This study identifies a prominent α1-AR-dependent AKT activation pathway that is under tonic inhibitory control by novel protein kinase Cs (nPKCs) in neonatal rat cardiomyocyte cultures. We also implicate Pyk2, Pyk2 complex formation with PDK-1 and paxillin, and increased PDK-1-Y373/376 phosphorylation as the mechanism that links α1-AR activation to increased AKT phosphorylation. nPKCs (which are prominent α1-AR effectors) interfere with this α1-AR-dependent AKT activation by blocking Pyk2/PDK-1/paxillin complex formation and PDK-1-Y373/376 phosphorylation. Additional studies used an adenoviral-mediated overexpression strategy to show that Pyk2 exerts dual controls on antiapoptotic PDK-1/AKT and proapoptotic c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathways. Although the high nPKC activity of most cardiomyocyte models favors Pyk2 signaling to JNK (and cardiac apoptosis), the cardioprotective actions of Pyk2 through the PDK-1/AKT pathway are exposed when PKC or JNK activation is prevented. Collectively, these studies identify JNK and AKT as functionally distinct downstream components of the α1-AR/Pyk2 signaling pathway. We also implicate nPKCs as molecular switches that control the balance of signaling via proapoptotic JNK and antiapoptotic PDK-1/AKT pathways, exposing a novel mechanism for nPKC-dependent regulation of cardiac hypertrophy and failure. © 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Guo, J., Sabri, A., Elouardighi, H., Rybin, V., & Steinberg, S. F. (2006). α1-adrenergic receptors activate AKT via a Pyk2/PDK-1 pathway that is tonically inhibited by novel protein kinase C isoforms in cardiomyocytes. Circulation Research, 99(12), 1367–1375. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000252830.01581.fd
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